Bulletin of Experimental Treatments for AIDS - 2000

2001

Summer/Autumn


Letter from the Editor: Rethinking the Paradigms
Leslie Hanna
This Summer/Autumn 2001 issue of BETA presents some changes intended to facilitate our goal of delivering important HIV treatment information to our readers in a timely fashion.

Osteoporosis and HIV Disease
Nicholas Cheonis
Bone disorders have emerged as a worrisome complication in persons with HIV infection. Over the past few years there have been increasing reports of osteoporosis (wasting of bone tissue due to bone mineral depletion) and osteopenia (moderate bone mineral depletion) in HIV positive adults and children.

BETA News Briefs
Liz Highleyman
June 2001 marked the twentieth anniversary of the first medical reports of the disease that would later become known as AIDS. On June 5, 1981, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) published a report in its Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report describing a cluster of cases of Pneumocystis carinii pneumonia (PCP) occurring in five gay men in Los Angeles.

AIDS Vaccines: The Ethical and Social Issues
Bruce Mirken
After years of frustration, there is renewed optimism in the vaccine field. Promising research findings combined with new infusions of interest (and money) from private charities and large pharmaceutical companies have recently raised hopes for development of a vaccine against HIV.

Spring

Letter from the Editor: Rethinking the Paradigms
Leslie Hanna
The feature articles in this issue of BETA offer a prismatic look at treatment issues that may particularly concern people who have been living with HIV and taking antiretroviral treatments for some time.

Monitoring Anti-HIV Medications: What is the FDA's Role?
Bruce Mirken
Most Americans have no direct contact with the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA), but their lives literally depend on the effectiveness of this agency. Charged with assuring the safety of specific foods and all medicines, the FDA has oversight over a staggering 25% of the U.S. economy.

Dual Protease Inhibitors Gain Ground
Dave Gilden
The past couple of years have seen a marked increase in the use of combinations of highly active antiretroviral therapy (HAART) that contain two protease inhibitors (PIs), usually ritonavir (Norvir) plus another PI. Ritonavir’s function is not primarily to further contain HIV but rather to increase the blood levels of the second PI, decrease pill burden, simplify dosing schedules, and thereby improve drug adherence.

HIV-Related Fatigue
Liz Highleyman
Fatigue can be one of the most debilitating symptoms experienced by people with HIV disease. Fortunately, there are several measures that people experiencing fatigue can take to improve their energy levels and overall quality of life.

The HIV Epidemic in Sub-Saharan Africa
Lisa Garbus
In the entire world, sub-Saharan Africa is the region most affected by HIV/AIDS. At the end of 2000, 25.3 million adults and children were living with HIV/AIDS in the region, accounting for 70% of the global total. There were 2.4 million AIDS deaths in sub-Saharan Africa during 2000, representing 80% of global AIDS deaths that year. In 2000, 3.8 million people in the region became infected with HIV, representing about 72% of all new global HIV infections. At the end of 2000, the region’s adult (15–49) HIV/AIDS prevalence rate was 8.8%. Of the region’s HIV positive adults, 55% were women. Over 80% of women worldwide living with HIV/AIDS live in sub-Saharan Africa.

The Role of Gender in HIV Progression
Ross G. Hewitt, MD; Nader Parsa, PhD; and Lawrence Gugino, MD
Recent studies have examined the experience of women and the potential for gender differences with respect to HIV progression and the acceptance, tolerance, adherence, and response regarding highly active antiretroviral therapy (HAART). Differences in CD4 cell count and viral load have not been reported in all studies. For any given CD4 cell count, women may be at a higher risk of HIV progression.

The 8th Annual Retrovirus Conference Highlights
Harvey S. Bartnof, MD
The 8th Annual Retrovirus Conference (also called the Conference on Retroviruses and Opportunistic Infections, or CROI) took place February 4–8, 2001, in Chicago. CROI is regarded as the most important annual conference in the U.S. concerning HIV/AIDS in the areas of clinical and basic sciences. There were 3,446 attendees from 58 countries worldwide (40% from outside the U.S.), including approximately 140 members of the general and community press.

AIDS-Related Web Sites



Recycle Your Medications



Winter

Letter from the Editor
Leslie Hanna
According to the most recent thinking on the history of time, the Winter 2001 issue of BETA is the first issue of the true new millennium. BETA, like the HIV epidemic, spans two millennia-startling but not quite shocking observations. Whatever the case may be, the very name "BETA" is an anachronism, hearkening back to the clinic of the early days of the epidemic.

HIV Among Men Who Have Sex with Men: The Persistent Epidemic
Tim Teeter
In 1997 epidemiologists at the World Health Organization (WHO) and the Joint United Nations Programme on HIV/AIDS (UNAIDS) estimated conservatively that somewhere in the world a human being is infected with the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) every ten seconds. WHO and UNAIDS also noted that sexual transmission of HIV accounts for approximately 90% of new HIV cases worldwide. The cumulative total of persons living with HIV and acquired immune deficiency syndrome (AIDS) throughout the world by the end of 2000 was estimated at 36.1 million.

Anal Neoplasia: A Growing Concern
Nicholas Cheonis
It is generally known that men who have sex with men (MSM) are at increased risk for contracting hepatitis A virus (HAV) and hepatitis B virus (HBV), both of which can be prevented by vaccination. Less widely known is the fact that MSM have high rates of anal cancer, or carcinoma, compared with the general population, and that HIV positive MSM have a substantially greater risk for anal cancer than do HIV negative MSM.

Anal Cancer and Colon Cancer
Nicholas Cheonis
Although some people equate anal cancer with cancer of the colon, the two diseases are distinct and considered to be unrelated. The anus comprises the very end of the large intestine.

Genital Warts
Nicholas Cheonis
Genital warts may appear both externally (e.g., on the penis, anus, or external female genitalia) and internally (e.g., in the anal canal or vagina).

HIV/AIDS Medicines Pricing Report: Setting Objectives: Is There a Political Will?
Carmen Pérez-Casas
NRTIs including ddI, d4T, lodenosine, and adefovir work against HIV by disrupting the function of the virus's reverse transcriptase enzyme, which converts the HIV gene set into a DNA form that inserts itself into human cell genomes. Nucleoside analog drugs are essentially defective versions of natural nucleosides (precursor compounds).

BETA News Briefs
Liz Highleyman
In early February the National Institutes of Health (NIH) updated its guidelines for treating HIV disease. The new guidelines shift emphasis away from the "hit hard, hit early" approach used since 1996, which advocated the use of highly active antiretroviral therapy (HAART) in persons with acute (early) HIV infection, those with symptomatic HIV infection, and asymptomatic persons with fewer than 500 CD4 cells/mm3 and a viral load greater than 10,000 copies/mL.

Lessons Learned from Natural History Studies in Women
Leslie Hanna
In a season that will likely see few drug candidates appearing on the market, Abbott Laboratories' lopinavir (more commonly known as ABT-378) may be the next drug to receive approval from the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA).

Conference Coverage
Harvey S. Bartnof, MD
This section includes selected highlights from two conferences that took place in Toronto last September: the 2nd International Workshop on Adverse Drug Reactions and Lipodystrophy in HIV, held September 13-15, 2000, and the 40th Interscience Conference on Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy (ICAAC), held September 17-20, 2000.

Re-Examining Treatment Recommendations for Women
Kathryn Anastos, MD
The rate of HIV infection in the United States has increased among women and individuals of color, while decreasing among White men. Women and individuals of color now represent 67% of people newly diagnosed with AIDS, 62% of individuals living with AIDS, and 69% of newly reported diagnoses of HIV infection.

AIDS-Related Web Sites
Current listing of AIDS-related web sites existing in Winter 2001

AIDS Drug Assistance Programs (ADAP) by State
Current listing of AIDS Drug Assistance Programs (ADAP) by State existing in Winter 2001

Open Clinical Trials for HIV/AIDS Treatments
Christopher Gortner
Current listing Open Clinical Trials for HIV/AIDS Treatments in progress Winter 2001

Glossary
Compiled by Nicholas Cheonis


Copyright © 2001 - San Francisco AIDS Foundation. Reproduced by permission. Reproduction of this article (other than one copy for personal reference) must be cleared through BETA: PO Box 426182, San Francisco, CA 94142-6182. Tel: 415 487 8060 Fax: 415 487 8069 URL: http://www.sfaf.org/beta E-mail: beta@sfaf.org

This information is designed to support, not replace, the relationship that exists between you and your doctor.
©1990,2001. ÆGiS.